The driver accused of causing a deadly head-on crash Wednesday along the Grand Parkway is also accused in a more sadistic crime in 2017, according to court records.

Charles Glaze, 54, was westbound on the Grand Parkway near FM 2920 around 2:30 p.m. when he allegedly crossed the grassy median, slammed into a car and went airborne before crashing into several other vehicles, according to the Harris County Sheriff's Office.

The crash left two people dead, a car split in half and a 50-yard debris field in what authorities described as one of the most horrific crashes in decades.

HCSO identified one of the dead victims as Michael Brown. Investigators are still working to positively identify the woman who also died in the wreck.

Glaze, along with several others, was rushed to an area hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. He told detectives that he did not know what happened right before the crash, but that he does have a history of seizures.

Officials told Chron.com that Glaze was wearing an ankle monitor when he was pulled from the wreck – a reminder of charges currently lodged against him in Montgomery County.

He's accused of attacking a grieving mother inside a Magnolia cemetery in June 2017.

The attack reportedly happened inside the Klein Memorial Park Cemetery in the 32500 block of Texas 249. A woman told investigators that she had been attacked as she was visiting a loved one late that day.

The man, later identified as Glaze, allegedly used a stun gun on her, and pointed a gun at her head before she was bound and gagged with zip ties and a men's necktie, according to court documents.

She was eventually able to escape after the suspect became too tired from her fighting, detectives said. She ran to nearby Magnolia Volunteer Fire Department Station 184 on Decker Prairie Road and got help.

Days later, Klein Memorial Cemetery employees told deputies investigating the attack that they noted a vehicle that day similar to one involved in another incident earlier that year on Mother's Day.

A second would-be victim reported that she felt uneasy during a conversation with the man, as she too was visiting a late loved one at Klein Memorial Park on FM 2090 in downtown Tomball.

In both incidents, the suspect showed the same MO: he would start up a conversation and proceed to get more aggressive. The earlier victim was able to shy away from the conversation before it became too dire, instead snatching a photo of the suspect's red four-door Ford F-150 as he drove away.

In Wednesday's crash, Glaze was driving red four-door Ford F-150. It is unclear if they are the same vehicle.

Glaze posted a $250,000 bond days after his June 2017 arrest, and has been on the streets ever since.

Authorities said no charges or citations have been filed against Glaze for the crash.

He's facing up to life in prison on a first-degree felony aggravated kidnapping charge, if convicted.

He's set for trial in April 2019, although it is unclear if that date will be pushed back in light of Wednesday's crash.